Service Area
Plumber, Electrician & HVAC in Sand Point Country Club — Seattle, WA
Panel upgrades, heat pump conversions, and staged repipes for the 1940s–60s homes around the 1927 course — quiet, review-ready installs with Seattle City Light rebates filed for you.
Rated 4.9 from 2,300+ Google reviews
- Licensed & Insured
- Upfront, flat-rate pricing
- Same-day & emergency service
- 100% satisfaction guarantee
- Family-owned since 2012

Eco Electric, Plumbing, Heating and Air serves Sand Point Country Club — the private community ringing the 1927 course above Lake Washington in northeast Seattle — with one licensed team across electrical, plumbing, and heating & cooling. Most homes here went up from the 1940s through the 1960s in the club's oval and along its fairway streets, and many have been remodeled top to bottom since. What the remodels often didn't touch: the service size, the supply lines, and the heating plant. Same-day service, upfront pricing, WA License ECOELEP765P5, 4.9★ across 2,300+ Google reviews. Call or text (206) 970-1031.
Mid-century homes, modern loads
A 1952 club-side home was built for a fraction of today's electrical demand. Add an EV, induction cooking, and a heat pump, and the original 100-amp service becomes the bottleneck — a load calculation and panel upgrade is usually the gateway project. From there, a heat pump replaces aging furnaces (and adds the cooling these homes never had), with ductless systems covering additions and view rooms without new ductwork.
The plumbing side of a 70-year-old street
Original galvanized supply lines and cast-iron drains are reaching the end of their design lives across the community at once. We camera-inspect before recommending anything; when it's time, a staged repipe restores pressure without tearing the house apart, and sewer repairs are planned around mature landscaping. Heat pump water heaters earn their keep here — up to 70% less water-heating energy, with a $750 Seattle City Light rebate on qualifying units.
Quiet, review-ready installs
Sand Point Country Club is a private community with expectations about how exterior work looks and sounds. Where equipment placement needs community sign-off, we prepare the specs, drawings, and manufacturer sound ratings — and we site condensers and generators for low visibility and low noise as a matter of course. Gate access, badged technicians, and a clean site are standard.
Seattle City Light rebates apply here
The community is Seattle City Light territory, so City Light's instant contractor discounts of up to $600 on qualifying heat pumps apply, Seattle's Clean Heat Program takes $2,000 off oil-to-heat-pump conversions (up to $6,000 with the income-qualified bonus), and City Light pays up to $750 on qualifying heat pump water heaters. Income-eligible households can stack Washington HEAR point-of-sale discounts — up to $8,000 on a heat pump and $4,000 on a supporting panel upgrade. We confirm what your project qualifies for and file everything. See current Washington rebates and heat pump installation cost in Seattle.
Services for Sand Point Country Club homes
- Panel Upgrades · Wiring & Rewiring · EV Chargers · Electrical Inspections
- Heat Pumps · Ductless Mini-Splits · Heating · Air Conditioning
- Repiping · Sewer Lines · Water Heaters · Heat Pump Water Heaters
- Eco Care Membership — seasonal tune-ups that keep original systems ahead of failure
Protect the home; keep the view; skip the surprises. 4.9★
- 2,300+ Google reviews
- WA Lic ECOELEP765P5
- BBB A+
- Since 2012. Free second opinion on any quote. Book online or call (206) 970-1031 — Se habla español.
Also serving nearby: Sand Point
Local know-how
Good to know in Sand Point Country Club
The details that change home projects from city to city — Sand Point Country Club's utilities, rebates, and inspection rules at a glance.
Who powers Sand Point Country Club
Seattle City Light
Seattle City Light powers the home (PSE supplies the natural gas), with instant contractor discounts on heat pumps and an extra Clean Heat bonus for oil-heated homes.
- Heat pump (Seattle City Light)Up to $2,600
- Oil-to-heat-pump conversion (Seattle Clean Heat)Up to $6,000
- Heat pump for heating & coolingUp to $8,000
- Heat pump water heater (Seattle City Light)Up to $750
Permits & inspections in Sand Point Country Club
Seattle Dept. of Construction & Inspections (SDCI)
Seattle runs its own electrical permitting and inspections through SDCI — one of the few cities in the state that does.
(206) 684-8464
We pull the permit and meet the inspector — it's part of the job, whichever authority covers your address.
The homes we work on in Sand Point Country Club
Sand Point Country Club's homes ring the 1927 course — mostly 1940s–1960s builds, many extensively remodeled, where mid-century services meet modern all-electric loads.
Homes in Sand Point Country Club — and the systems that fit them
Pick the property type that matches yours to see which electrical, plumbing, and heating & cooling upgrades make the most sense for how these homes were actually built.
Which home is yours?
Built 1940s-1960s. The community's first waves - mid-century layouts with original service sizes, galvanized supply lines, and furnaces well past design life.
- Panel Upgrades The gateway project - capacity for a heat pump, induction range, and EV charger at once.
- Heat Pumps Replace the aging furnace and add the cooling these homes never had - City Light discounts apply.
- Repiping Galvanized lines rust shut from the inside; staged repiping restores pressure.
- Water Heaters Original and second-generation tanks are one failure away from a flooded floor.
Not sure which fits? Call (206) 970-1031 and we’ll match the right system to your Sand Point Country Club home — no guesswork.
Common services in Sand Point Country Club
Jump directly to the service page that matches what you need. These linked service bullets render on every service-area page so city pages never end with unlinked service lists.
FAQ — Sand Point Country Club homes
Does exterior equipment need approval in Sand Point Country Club?
The community has standards for how exterior work looks and sounds, and visible equipment placements generally warrant sign-off before work begins. Eco prepares the specs, drawings, and sound ratings, and we site equipment for low visibility and low noise by default - it's easier to approve work that was designed for approval.
My 1950s home still has its original 100-amp panel. Is that enough?
Usually not once an EV charger, induction range, or heat pump enters the picture. A load calculation gives the real answer; most homes here need a panel or service upgrade first. Income-eligible households can get up to $4,000 toward a panel upgrade through Washington HEAR when it supports efficient electric equipment.
Can I get cooling without adding ductwork?
Yes - ductless mini-splits were made for mid-century homes. Compact outdoor units, quiet indoor heads, no demolition, and Seattle City Light's heat pump discounts apply to qualifying systems.
How do you handle plumbing in homes this age?
We camera-inspect before recommending anything. Original galvanized supply lines typically need a staged repipe to restore pressure; cast-iron drains meet tree roots at the joints. Both are planned around finishes and mature landscaping - no surprises, and a firm price before work starts.
How fast can you get to northeast Seattle?
Same-day in most cases - Sand Point, View Ridge, and the club streets are minutes off our regular Seattle routes, with after-hours emergency support for urgent failures. Calls are answered 24/7.
Around Sand Point Country Club
HOA know-how
Sand Point Country Club is a private community with standards for how exterior work looks and sounds. Where equipment placement needs community sign-off, we prepare the specs, placement drawings, and manufacturer sound ratings — and we site heat pump condensers, generators, and EV-charger conduit for low visibility and low noise as a matter of course.
More featured neighborhoods
See all featured communities →Need service in Sand Point Country Club? Let's talk.
Talk to our team — you'll get a clear, upfront price before any work begins, and a job that's done right the first time.


